A few years ago, influencer marketing was simple math: more followers meant more impact. Brands chased the blue ticks, the eight-digit follower counts, the big-bang launches. Scale was strategy.
But in 2026, that equation is looking shaky.
WPP Media’s This Year Next Year (TYNY) 2026 report hints at a deeper reset underway – a move from “shouting at the masses” to “whispering to communities.” And in India’s rapidly maturing influencer economy, that whisper is starting to outperform the megaphone.
Engagement on mega handles isn’t disappearing – but it’s becoming unpredictable. Audiences are scrolling faster, questioning more, and reserving trust for creators who feel closer, not just bigger. Regional voices are rising. Micro-communities are tightening. AI-driven personas are entering the chat. Meanwhile, social commerce metrics and regulatory scrutiny are forcing brands to move beyond vanity reach toward accountable impact.
The question, then, isn’t whether mega influencers are irrelevant. It’s whether scale alone is enough anymore. To understand whether the era of mega influence is cooling – or simply evolving – we spoke to industry leaders navigating this recalibration firsthand.
Balancing Macro and Micro Creators
According to Madison Advertising Report 2026, engagement in Tier‑2 and Tier‑3 cities has risen, suggesting that audiences are increasingly turning to trusted local and regional creators.

Highlighting this shift, Priyank Dattani, Associate Creative Director at White Rivers Media, explained that brands were pairing macro influencers for awareness with micro and nano creators for engagement and conversions. Smaller creators in tier-2 and tier-3 cities delivered higher engagement and were seen as more credible by niche audiences.
“Vernacular content in Hindi, Tamil, and Telugu had become essential for reaching the Bharat consumer, and regional creators led that space naturally. This trend pushed brands toward structured, long-term partnerships over one-off celebrity deals,” he added.
Meanwhile, WPP Media’s recently launched TYNY report 2026 highlights that brands were increasingly evaluating audience quality and engagement metrics over follower count, reflecting a shift toward accountable creator partnerships rather than purely aspirational selections.

Building on this, Aditya Gurwara, Co-founder and Head of Brand Alliances at Qoruz, added, “Earlier, reach itself was the headline metric. Now reach is expected. Brands asked what happened after reach. Did it move conversation? Did it trigger saves? Did it drive search? That second layer became more important. Mega creators are not declining. The ecosystem was expanding, and measurement became more layered.”

Similarly, Hitarth Dadia, CEO of Nofiltr.Group, explained, “Trust declined first. Audiences got sophisticated – they can tell when someone’s reading a brief versus when they actually use the product. That eroded reach efficiency, because platforms reward engagement and retention, not just impressions. If people scroll past a sponsored post, the algorithm notices before the brand does. Business impact is the last domino – it’s declining now because brands are finally measuring beyond impressions and realising the math doesn’t work.”
Reach Efficiency and Credibility
The Madison Advertising Report 2026 highlights that audience quality, engagement, and credibility have become central metrics for evaluating creator impact, surpassing simple follower counts. Campaign outcomes are now scrutinised for consistency, trust, and meaningful interactions rather than just scale.

On this note, Rajni Daswani, Chief Growth Officer at SoCheers, said, “Reach efficiency is the primary concern in the current landscape. Mega creators still offer scale and credible attention, but audiences have increasingly started to understand the commercial saturation and perceive a large share of content as advertising. Business surely has not vanished, but has become less consistent and harder to attribute.”
Creator value is now evaluated according to the cost per engagement (CPE), audience quality, rather than just followers. The question we are addressing in 2026 is whether behavioural change can be driven without losing credibility.
Meanwhile, WPP Media’s TYNY report, highlights that campaign structures had evolved from single-hero bursts to distributed, modular systems, where budgets and briefs were adjusted based on early performance and community response.
Dattani explained, “The micro-creator model redefines scale, shifting focus from audience size to audience quality. Distributed campaigns across hyperlocal networks allow brands to reach Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets cost-effectively, without proportional increases in spend. On ROI, performance-linked and long-term retainer contracts with smaller creators prioritise conversions over impressions. Niche creators typically attract audiences with stronger category interest, which brings down customer acquisition costs and makes outcomes more predictable. For brand impact, compliance-ready partnerships with community voices build stronger recall within specific consumer segments”

Similarly, Himanshu Arora, Co-founder of Social Panga and CEO-Creative at LS Digital, explained, “Instead of 70% on one face, we see distributed allocation, often a hybrid model. 1–2 large creators for narrative authority & some 15–50 micro creators for contextual amplification. The shift is from “who has the loudest voice?” to “who owns the most trusted conversation?”
According to Madison Advertising Report 2026, brands were balancing mega and micro creators strategically, with micro creators often outperforming in efficiency and audience trust. Campaign spending had become more conditional and scrutinised.
Reflecting on this, Gurwara said, From what we are seeing in 2025 to 26, brands are not cutting mega spends. They are adding micro ecosystems with more seriousness. The top-of-funnel remains strong and I do not see that lowering anytime soon. But brands are now investing in micro creators as a strategic layer, not an experiment. The reason is simple. There are more creators today than ever before. More creators means more niche engagement pockets. More engagement pockets mean more brand opportunities to tap into communities that feel closer and more relevant. So this is expansion, not substitution.”
Building on this, Dadia added, “The metric that decided creator value inside our media plans was how much of a creator’s audience actually acted on what they said, not how many people technically saw it. Audience-brand overlap, engagement indicating purchase intent saves, shares, comments asking ‘where do I buy this’ and repeat performance across campaigns mattered most. The follower count was the least interesting number in the room.”
Micro Creators Drive Conversions
According to Madison Advertising Report 2026, smaller creators consistently outperformed mega influencers in bottom-funnel metrics, including saves, clicks, and cost-effective conversions.
Daswani mentioned that mega influencers did help with conversions, but smaller creators consistently outperformed on efficiency and stronger save behaviour with lower cost of acquisition.
“Audiences tended to trust their peers more than performative personalities, who had become harder to relate to. Mega creators remained effective at the discovery stage, but for decision-making, familiarity beat fame. Strategies blended both, but preference tilted toward creators with more engaged, trust-rich audiences,” Daswani mentioned.
Meanwhile, Arora explained, “Mega creators drove awareness spikes, traffic surges, and cultural validation. Micro creators often outperformed in saves, comment depth, and conversions, particularly for regional and niche campaigns.”
Furthermore, Dadia added, “The smart reallocation wasn’t mega-to-micro. It was one-off-to-recurring. The bulk went into a curated group of 8-15 creators across audience segments who worked with the brand repeatedly, quarter over quarter. That’s where compounding happened. The first campaign built awareness, the second built trust, the third drove conversion.”
Finally, Dattani added, “Trust was measured through behaviour over time. The strongest signals were retention, consistency, and depth actions with meaningful comments and sentiment stability. Regional relevance was growing, and lived context constantly outperformed generic metro voices. Trust was assessed longitudinally, not just campaign by campaign. It was accumulated proof that audiences still listened, believed, and acted even when commercial intent was visible.”
Evolution Over Decline
Industry reports consistently indicate that mega influencers are not declining but that the influencer ecosystem in India is evolving into a structured, multi-tiered system. Mega influencers continue to provide broad visibility and top-of-funnel reach, while micro and nano creators deliver sustained engagement in niche and regional markets.
Industry players have emphasised that smaller creators in Tier‑2 and Tier‑3 cities generate higher engagement and stronger credibility with niche audiences. Long-term partnerships with these creators reduce customer acquisition costs and make outcomes more predictable. Meanwhile, mega influencers create visibility spikes, and micro creators sustain interest and facilitate meaningful interactions, illustrating that the ecosystem is expanding rather than replacing top-tier creators.
Looking ahead, brands are expected to increasingly treat influencer marketing as a professionalised, data-driven channel. Regional relevance, audience retention, and trust are becoming central to campaign planning, enabling a combination of broad reach and precise, targeted engagement. Across reports and industry players’ insights, it is clear that perceptions of mega influencer decline are misleading, and the influencer ecosystem in India is undergoing strategic evolution, becoming more measurable, multi-tiered, and aligned with business outcomes














